(Please Note: The Attorney General Often Deviates From Prepared
Remarks)

Good afternoon.

Today, a federal grand jury indictment was unsealed in New Jersey and a series
of charges were brought in the Southern District of Ohio alleging the illegal
transfer of firearms from Ohio to street gang members in East Orange, New Jersey.

These firearms were purchased using "straw buyers," persons not prohibited
from buying guns, who are willing to buy guns for others and lie on the required
background check form.

Over the past two months, a series of investigations and court cases similar
to the New Jersey and Ohio case are highlighting the successes the Department
of Justice is having in combating the threat of gun crime in the United States.

More than two years ago, President Bush made a commitment to the safety of
citizens and to the rule of law with the creation of Project Safe Neighborhoods.
He stated clearly and unequivocally, quote, "If you use a gun illegally,
you will do hard time."

Federal, state and local crime-fighters are delivering on this commitment,
in a revolutionary campaign against violent gun crime in America. A record-setting
level of federal gun crime prosecutions up 68 percent in the past three
years along with effective prevention and deterrence efforts, have helped
fuel the lowest rate of violent crime victimization since such records were
kept.

The Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that the violent crime rate plunged
21 percent between 1999-2000 and 2001-2002. Behind this statistic are women,
men and children who are safer in their homes and on the streets. Approximately
130,000 fewer Americans were victims of gun crime in 2001-2002 than in 1999-2000.

Critical to this success has been Project Safe Neighborhoods, a national commitment
to reduce gun crime on the local level. Project Safe Neighborhoods links federal,
state, and local law enforcement, prosecutors, and community leaders in a comprehensive
strategy of deterrence, prevention and prosecution of gun crime.

Since FY 2000 there has been a 62 percent increase in defendants charged
with firearm-related crimes;

Project Safe Neighborhoods set a record in FY 2002 for increasing the
number of defendants charged with gun-related crimes by 20.2 percent.

This year, Project Safe Neighborhoods set a new Department record
nearly 23 percent more defendants were charged with gun crimes.

Federal offenders are being sentenced to significant prison time. In
FY 2003, about 72 percent of offenders were sentenced to prison terms greater
than three years. 93 percent of defendants were sentenced to some prison time.

Project Safe Neighborhoods allows federal, state and local law enforcement
agencies and prosecutors to work together to pursue those individuals and groups
who seek to procure, purchase and use firearms illegally. The indictments unsealed
today in New Jersey and the charges brought in Ohio are an example of how Project
Safe Neighborhoods works.

Defendants James Dillard, Quadree Smith, a/k/a "Trouble," Michael
Harris, a/k/a "Fat Mike," and Daniel Alvarez are charged with conspiracy
to deal in firearms without a license, and dealing in firearms without a license.
Defendant Smith also faces a third count, of being a felon in possession of
a firearm.

Dillard is the owner of the Hole in the Wall Gun Shop in Xenia, Ohio. Smith
is the alleged leader of the Double II Bloods in East Orange, New Jersey. Harris
and Alvarez are alleged members of the Double II Bloods.

The indictment identifies by initials three unindicted co-conspirators, all
Wilberforce University students.

Others charged in the conspiracy include former Wilberforce students-turned-gun
traffickers, who allegedly brokered the deals with Dillard in Ohio and then
transferred the guns to Smith and the other gang members in travels through
Ohio, New Jersey and New York.

Dillard is also charged by criminal complaint in the Southern District of Ohio
with three counts of being an Ohio federal firearms licensee and selling firearms
knowingly to a resident of another state.

In addition, criminal complaints out of the Southern District of Ohio charge
eight straw buyers, including the three cited in the New Jersey indictment,
with knowingly making false statements to a federal firearms licensee.

While Dillard is not alleged to have known specifically who the ultimate owners
of the guns would be, he knew that the "straw buyers", the Wilberforce
students, were merely paperwork intermediaries recruited by co-conspirators
to legitimize the sales in Ohio. Dillard is accused of aiding and abetting others
in the conspiracy to deal in firearms without a license.

Among the crimes charged in the New Jersey indictment, Dillard made two sales
one for 16 firearms, another for 15 to two different straw buyers
on April 22, 2002. Five days earlier, Dillard allegedly sold 25 firearms to
one of the same straw buyers. In all, the charges in Ohio allege that approximately
200 firearms, most of them semi-automatic hand guns, were purchased illegally
in Ohio. Most, if not all, were shipped out of the state illegally.

Recently, a number of straw buyer and interstate firearms trafficking investigations
and prosecutions have highlighted the successful, cooperative efforts to stem
gun crime:

In a case out of South Carolina, ten defendants have pleaded guilty
over the past two months to charges relating to trafficking almost fifty firearms
from South Carolina to New York.

On Monday, December 8, the lead defendant and three co-defendants in
a North Carolina-based weapons trafficking scheme pleaded guilty to charges
relating to the trafficking of nearly seventy handguns, including several to
the Washington, D.C., area.

In US v. Smith, the defendant was found guilty on Wednesday, December
10, of charges related to illegal firearms trafficking from North Carolina to
New York. He will be sentenced in March.

In yet another case out of South Carolina over the past four months,
all twelve defendants have pleaded guilty to charges for their roles in a straw-purchasing-weapons
scheme in which almost forty firearms were transported to New York illegally.

In US v. Quaites, the defendant pleaded guilty yesterday to conspiracy
to make false statements in connection with the acquisition of a firearm and
to charges relating to trafficking about forty firearms from Arkansas to Chicago.

Under Project Safe Neighborhoods, U.S. Attorneys in each of the 94 districts
work with local law enforcement and other officials to identify the most serious
local gun crime problems and develop strategic plans to address the problems.

Criminals who use guns are prosecuted under federal, state or local laws, depending
on which jurisdiction can provide the strongest and most appropriate punishment.
Each district also implements deterrence and prevention strategies.

The Bush Administration has dedicated over $820 million to Project Safe Neighborhoods.
More than 700 new federal, state, and local prosecutors, almost 400 new support
investigators, and research and community outreach support for each U.S. Attorney
district. More than 11,000 local law enforcement officers, prosecutors, and
other Project Safe Neighborhoods task force members have received training in
preventing and combating gun violence.

I thank Assistant Attorney General Christopher Wray and the Criminal Division,
U.S. Attorneys Christopher Christie, Greg Lockhart and their offices for their
efforts in this case. I also thank Acting ATF Director Buckles, and the ATF
offices in Ohio and New Jersey, as well as elsewhere, for their work in enforcing
the gun laws that are making America's street safer.

The Justice Department is committed to and focused on protecting the lives
and liberties of the American public, whether from international terrorists
or gun-toting thugs on our streets.

In the past 28 months, there has been no major terrorist attack on our shores,
and we have driven down the violent crime rate to historic lows. These results
are due to the coordinated hard work of federal, state and local law enforcement
agencies, prosecutors, and communities, and the tough investigative, prosecutorial,
and prevention tools they have at their disposal.